David A. Hall

(16 Oct 1795 - 24 Dec 1870)

David A. Hall rests at Range 34 Site 63 in Congressional Cemetery beside two children by his first wife, and his three wives (Susan Bulfinch, daughter of Charles Bulfinch, Architect of the Capitol; Margaret Condict, daughter of Congressman Lewis Condict; and Abigail Ellsworth, granddaughter of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Ellsworth).

David Hall arrived in Washington about 1820 to study law with Elias Boudinot Caldwell (Range 51 Site 13), lawyer, clerk of the Supreme Court, ordained Presbyterian minister and one of the founders of the American Colonization Society. After passing the bar, Hall secured his future by agreeing to represent James Greenleaf (Range 49 Site 23), the largest owner of real estate in early Washington. Greenleaf said that he retained Hall because he was the only honest lawyer he knew.

Hall adopted the views of his mentor (Caldwell) and for many years was an advocate of repatriating free blacks to Liberia. He was opposed to abolition because he believed that slave owners should be compensated, but he gained a reputation as being strongly anti-slavery. He was welcomed into a social group of some of the most prominent people in Washington society, many of whom were also anti-slavery. He was a close friend of Daniel Webster and William Seward, and corresponded with such anti-slavery notables as Gerrit Smith, Salmon P. Chase, Lewis Tappan and Charles Francis Adams (son of John Quincy Adams). His neighbors were Margaret and Gamaliel Bailey, editor of the National Era, who hosted regular gatherings of local anti-slavery men and women.

Stanley Harrold in Subversives states that in 1842 there were prominent whites in Washington who had inside information on Charles Torrey's and Thomas Smallwood's URR activities. He lists David A. Hall as one of them, and he writes "In late 1843 the Auxiliary Guard discovered the baggage of a female slave, who allegedly belonged to Hall, in a wagon Torrey proposed to drive north. That this woman intended to go with Torrey without Hall's knowledge is unlikely. Otherwise Hall would not subsequently have agreed to provide legal counsel to Torrey and a black associate." Hall defended the black associate, John Bush, who owned the livery stable where Torrey and Smallwood's horses were kept. Although first convicted, Hall won Bush's acquittal on appeal in late 1844.

About the time of the failed escape, Hall was also representing William Jones, a black Virginian, falsely held as a runaway slave. Hall prepared a petition which Joshua Giddings presented to Congress as a challenge to a District of Columbia ordinance that allowed for free blacks falsely arrested as fugitive slaves to be sold into slavery if they could not pay their jail fees.

Hall was negotiating in 1847 with slaveowner (Levi?) Pumphrey (Range 47 Site 203). One of Pumphrey's female slaves had escaped and friends were attempting to get Pumphrey to sell her children at a moderate price so that they could be purchased and returned to their mother. Pumphrey wanted "full price" for the children, and abolitionist Thomas Garrett wrote from Wilmington, Delaware, asking David to try again. The outcome of the negotiation is not known, but it is clear from this letter that Hall was in contact with active participants in the URR and using his skills as a lawyer to assist in freeing slaves.

In April 1848 Hall became involved in the Pearl escape attempt. After their capture the 74 slaves and the ship's officers were imprisoned in the Washington Jail. Daniel Drayton, the Captain, wrote "About nine or ten o'clock, Mr. Giddings, the member of Congress from Ohio, came to see us. … Mr. Giddings said that he had understood we were here in jail without counsel or friends, and that he had come to let us know that we should not want for either; and he introduced the person he had brought with him as one who was willing to act temporarily as our counsel. Not long after, Mr. David A. Hall, a lawyer of the District, came to offer his services to us in the same way. Key, the United States Attorney for the District, and who, as such, had charge of the proceedings against us, was there at the same time. He advised Mr. Hall to leave the jail and go home immediately, as the people outside were furious, and he ran the risk of his life. To which Mr. Hall replied that things had come to a pretty pass, if a man's counsel was not to have the privilege of talking with him." Hall served as their counsel until Horace Mann was recruited for the defense, and he continued to do research for Mann until another local lawyer replaced him. Hall wrote to Salmon P. Chase about the cases in a postscript to the letter described in the next paragraph.

Known for his willingness to help African Americans in need, in June 1848 Hall wrote to Chase on behalf of "A very worthy old coloured [sic] woman whom I have known for several years and respect highly for her industrious habits and upright life." The woman feared her young daughter and husband, both free, had been kidnapped, and Hall wrote to ask Chase for his help in locating the couple, as they were reported to have been taken to Cincinnati. Chase wrote in his diary on July 7, 1848 "called on Bates the barber to get him to make enquiries about colored boy & wife, supposed to be kidnapped &c by Ficklin M.C. of Illinois." The next entry in the diary is not until November, so it is not known whether the couple was located.

In November Hall negotiated with the owner of a slave, Harriet Scott, to provide time for her brother to raise money to purchase her freedom. Hall loaned the brother $200 towards the purchase price, and Chaplin and Limaeus Noble, both radical abolitionists, raised the remaining $300.

In 1853 Hall provided legal representation to Myrtilla Miner, negotiating and preparing the deeds to purchase land for the Normal School for Colored Girls that she had founded in 1851. The final documented negotiation in which he was involved was the purchase of the Weems brothers in 1856. They were working in Alabama, but their owner was a resident of Washington. The cooperation of four men, Daniel Ratcliffe, David A. Hall, Gamaliel Bailey and Benjamin B. French (Range 64 Site 200) resulted in an agreement to provide the funding to purchase the brothers. Hall wrote the sale contract and in early 1857 the brothers arrived in Washington and were reunited with their parents.

As one final evidence of Hall's connection with and commitment to participants in the URR, Hall, described by William H. Seward as a benevolent and amiable man, provided financial assistance to William Chaplin who was arrested in August 1850 on charges of assisting 2 slaves to escape, larceny of slaves and assault with the intent to kill. Bail was set at $6,000 in the District and $19,000 in Maryland. Hall agreed to contribute $6,000 towards Chaplin's release on assurances from William R. Smith that Gerrit Smith would reimburse him if the bail was forfeited. But, this promise was made without Gerrit's knowledge. When Chaplin failed to appear for trial, Hall found himself owing $6,000, and William Smith proved unable to provide the promised reimbursement. In 1852 a judgment was rendered against Hall, and part of his property was seized. Although Gerrit Smith eventually provided $2,000, this loss caused severe financial hardship and in a diary entry of December 17, 1857, William Seward describes a visit from Mrs. Hall to appeal for his aid. Hall's property was eventually restored to him but not until 1861 when he was an elderly and frail man of 66 years.

Douglass Zeverly, in a paper read before the Historical Society of D.C. in 1902 and based on correspondence with Hall's daughter, said of David Hall "He would never hold slaves with the idea of buying and selling them, but owned them for use as servants, so as to keep them from being sold away from their families, and then encouraged them to buy their freedom by crediting them with wages each month. &helip; But his treatment of them so won their devotion that when they found their freedom had been paid for, they would always entreat him earnestly to keep them as slaves. This he would never consent to do, however, but he assisted many of those who could do so to go to Canada with their families."

Perhaps the greatest tribute to David A. Hall's work on behalf of African Americans is his daughter's recollection of his funeral. She wrote: "None of the gatherings in my old home, brilliant as many of them were, are so impressed upon my memory as the sight of the little group of weeping black men and women that gathered around my father's casket, and in sobbing tones spoke of his goodness to them in the old days of slavery, when he saved them from being sold and separated from kith and kin."